Oman Daily Observer

3 dead in Philippine­s as typhoon heads to HK

105,000 in shelters, buildings damaged, power down

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MANILA: A strong typhoon tore across the northern tip of the Philippine­s on Saturday, killing at least three people, wrecking homes and triggering landslides before heading towards Hong Kong and southern China by evening.

Mangkhut entered the Philippine­s as a super typhoon in the early hours and ripped over the main island of Luzon with winds of more than 200 kmph and torrential rains.

Known locally as Ompong, Typhoon Mangkhut at one point hit gusts of 305 kmph before it left the Philippine­s and moved across the South China Sea with reduced wind speeds.

Hong Kong was braced for Mangkhut, with authoritie­s expected to raise the second strongest typhoon signal between 11 pm and 2 am (1500 and 1800 GMT).

The Philippine disaster agency said two rescue workers died while trying to free people trapped in a landslide in the mountainou­s Cordillera region, while police said a body had been found in a river in Manila.

Mauricio Domogan, mayor of Bagiuo, said three people were killed in landslides and six were missing. It was not clear if the three dead included the rescue workers.

“They didn’t expect it would happen, that’s why they didn’t evacuate. Unfortunat­ely it happened,” he told DZMM radio.

State weather agency PAGASA downgraded its threat level, but warned the danger was far from over, with storm surges and heavy rains that had caused widespread flooding and landslides. “We are asking the people to remain alert and continue taking precaution­s,” said meteorolog­ist Rene Paciente.

Rapid response teams were prepared to join the air force on search and rescue missions as civil defence teams scoured areas in the path of Mangkhut, which felled trees and pulled down lines of electricit­y poles.

Signs were seen hanging off shop fronts, sheet metal roofs peeled off and debris was strewn across urban roads.

There was flooding in several provinces and parts of the capital Manila and officials planned to release water from dams, fearing rains could push reservoirs to dangerous levels.

Mangkhut had been a category 5 storm for days since wreaking havoc in US Pacific territorie­s of Micronesia before edging towards the Philippine­s, where it is the 15th and strongest storm this year.

The typhoon’s peak winds were stronger than those of Hurricane Florence in the United States after it piled into the Carolinas, before it was downgraded to a tropical storm.

More than 1,000 houses were impacted in Cagayan province, where the storm first made landfall.

Some 105,000 people in the Philippine­s were staying in temporary shelters after the mass evacuation of coastal areas following major storm surge warnings. Foreign and local aid groups were distributi­ng supplies.

Power and communicat­ions were down in parts of northern Luzon, where some residents in high-risk areas chose to ride out the storm to protect homes from looters.

 ?? — AFP ?? A man carries his sick child as it is being transferre­d to a car as their ambulance is stuck on a highway by toppled electric posts after Typhoon Mangkhut hit Baggao town in Cagayan province, north of Manila on Saturday.
— AFP A man carries his sick child as it is being transferre­d to a car as their ambulance is stuck on a highway by toppled electric posts after Typhoon Mangkhut hit Baggao town in Cagayan province, north of Manila on Saturday.

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